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The Third InquiryPrècis Law Report transcribed by Senan Molony
THE THIRD INQUIRY into the Titanic tragedy was a legal test case brought in the
Royal Courts of Justice in the Strand, London, from June 20-26, 1913. It
featured fresh testimony from all the surviving Titanic officers, including Charles
Lightoller, Harold Lowe, Herbert Pitman and Joseph Boxhall.
Others who testified included Titanic lookouts Reginald Lee, Frederick Fleet,
George Symons and George Hogg, and Marconi operators Harold Bride and
Stanley Adams (Mesaba). Also to give evidence were Joseph Scarrott, AB, a
number of Master mariners, and others.
The prècis Law Report is reproduced here for the first time since the case was
originally ventilated.
Justice Clement MeachemBailhache
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LAW REPORT, Friday June 20, 1913.
HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
THE TITANIC DISASTER
RYAN v. OCEANIC STEAM NAVIGATION COMPANY (LIMITED)
(Before Mr Justice Clement Meachem Bailhache and a Special Jury)
In this case the plaintiff, Thomas Ryan, sued the defendants, the Oceanic Steam
Navigation Company, to recover damages for the
death of his son Patrick Ryan, who was drowned
whilst a passenger on the defendants' vessel, the
Titanic, owing to the alleged negligence of the
defendants' servants.
The defendants denied negligence, and in the
alternative pleaded that the deceased was carried
as a passenger under the terms of a contract
which exempted them from liability for the
negligence of their servants. The plaintiff in his
reply pleaded that the terms of the contract set up
by the defendants was illegal.
Mr James Campbell, King’s Counsel, and Mr
Thomas Scanlan appeared for the plaintiff; and Mr
Henry Edward Duke KC, Mr Maurice Hill KC, and
Mr W. Norman Raeburn for the defendants.
Solicitors for the plaintiffs, Mr H.Z. Deane;
Solicitors for the defendants, Rawle, Johnstone &
Co.
Thomas Scanlan
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Before the case was opened, His Lordship said he saw that there were four
actions against the defendants in the list, and desired to know whether they were
to be tried together, or whether there was any agreement that the result of one
action was to bind the others.
Mr Duke said he thought they would be content,
on the main question, that the evidence in the first
action should be taken as being given successively
in each of the others, leaving only the question of
the personal issue of each plaintiff.
Mr Campbell said that every question in the case
was common to all, except the actual amount of
damages.
Mr Justice Bailhache - Is the question of a
contract made with the defendants common to all
the actions, or does it to some extent depend on
the class of person being carried?
Mr Campbell said that there was the same in each case so far as the tickets
were concerned.
Mr Justice Bailhache - Then we had better try the two questions of the
negligence and the contract first, and these questions being disposed of, there will
remain, in one event, the question of damages in each case.
Mr Duke said he thought it would be more convenient to take the question of
negligence first and then deal separately with the question of the taking of the
tickets by the passengers.
Mr Campbell said that the circumstances and conditions on which the tickets
were taken varied in each case.
Mr Justice Bailhache - If that is so, I think it will be convenient to try first the
question of negligence or no negligence.
Mr Campbell, in opening the case for the plaintiff, said the case one of very
great importance for the parties and also one of infinite importance to the
travelling public. It was the first of a number of cases pending which arose out of
the well-known catastrophe which resulted in the loss of the Titanic in the early
Henry Edward Duke
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morning of April 15th last year. The Titanic actually came into collision with the
iceberg at 11.40pm on the night of the 14th, but did not disappear until 2.30am
on the morning of the 15th. There were on board the vessel in all 2,201 persons,
of whom 1,316 were passengers, the remainder being the crew, officers and staff
of the vessel.
Of these 1,316 passengers, 447 were women and 119 children. Seven hundred
and eleven persons were saved out of the total of 2,201. The accident was terrible
in its consequences and in its surrounding circumstances, and the jury would
recollect the amount of sympathy and sorrow to which it gave rise.
He did not know exactly what course was going to be taken in those
proceedings on behalf of the defendants. If they were there to resist liability on all
and every possible ground he feared that the jury's duties would last for a
considerable period.
There had already been a public investigation into all the circumstances
connected with he accident, which had been conducted by a board of experts
presided over by Lord Mersey. That Inquiry lasted 39 days and more than 90
witnesses were examined. Of course that Inquiry extended to other matters
beyond those concerned in the present action, but it was difficult to say where
and when the present case would stop if the defendants were going to test every
question in the case.
There were certain questions of fact, as distinct from questions of law, which
would be for the jury to decide, and he was going to apply himself in the first
instance to those questions of fact which turned upon the issue of whether the
defendants were responsible for the death of these persons, by whose relations
the actions were brought, owing to their negligent navigation of the ship in which
they were passengers by the defendants' servants.
He was sorry for the sake of his client that this great fight, which he presumed
would be made a test case, must arise in a case in which the plaintiff was a
humble man in small circumstances. He [Thomas Ryan] was a very small farmer
living in the south of Ireland, and he brought this case to recover damages for the
death of his son [Patrick Ryan], aged 27, who was drowned. The case was of great
importance to him, but he was not exactly the sort of litigant one would select to
fight a great company like the defendants. He had, however, the good fortune or
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ill fortune to have his case first in the lists, and it was the facts of his case that
he (Mr Campbell) was going to open to the jury, although the general
circumstances relating to the question of the alleged negligence of the defendants
affected all the litigants in these cases as well as the plaintiff in that particular
action.
The plaintiff, Thomas Ryan, was a man 70 years of age,
and lived in the south of County Cork. His son, Patrick
Ryan, arranged with a comrade called Moran, who was
going with his sister to America, to procure a ticket for
him at the same time as he procured his own and his
sister's ticket. Moran accordingly went to some
merchant in the city of Cork who was an agent for
selling tickets for the defendants' company for the
purpose of obtaining them.
Having regard to one of the defences raised by the
defendants, it was important that the jury should know
that in the case of Ryan no ticket was given him at all, but they gave one ticket to
Moran, on which the names of Moran, the sister and Ryan appeared, and they
charged Moran for three tickets.
The Titanic was a leviathan ship with a gross register of a little less than 46,000
tons, and she was on her way from this country to New York when the accident
occurred. These great North Atlantic passenger ships had what they called their
outward route. It was a fairly well defined track, and all the great Atlantic liners
going to America took it. There was an equally well defined route for the return
journey along a different track.
There was an obvious convenience in having different routes, because it
obviated the danger of collision of collision between outward-bound and
homeward-bound ships; and there was the additional advantage that if on the
journey out or home one of these ship became disabled, she would be very likely
to meet assistance if she was on the defined track. On the outward route there
was always a liability of meeting floating ice, and that danger began to be
aggravated about April 1, and the dangerous period extended to the end of
August.
Daniel Moran
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There was no dispute that the Titanic came into collision with an iceberg on
April 15 last. During the two days preceding the collision the Titanic was
travelling in the vicinity of icebergs, and direct intimations were received by the
officers and staff that they had reached a place where dangers were abounding.
MARCONI MESSAGES
They (the jury) had heard a great deal about Marconis recently, but all that he
need say about them in connection with the case was that there was a Marconi
installation on board the Titanic and the staff operated it. If the warnings given by
wireless telegraphy had been heeded, it was probable that the disaster would
never have happened.
A question might arise in the case as to how far the Marconi operators were
identified with the staff of the vessel. They signed the ship's articles and were to
some extent under the orders of the captain and officers. That was material,
because it was suggested that two out of the five Marconigrams received before
the disaster had never reached an officer on the ship. It could not now be proved
that this was the case, because the Master, the Chief Officer, and the First Officer
were drowned.
He would ask them to assume, however, that the operators did their duty, and
that all five messages reached an official of the ship. Whether they did or not was
not very material because the three admittedly received were sufficient to give
ample warning.
Mr Duke said that with regard to two of the five messages mentioned, it was not
admitted that they had been received by any officer or official of the ship.
Mr Campbell, continuing, said that he should prove the despatch of the
messages, and he should ask the jury to assume that if five messages were
received on the ship, three of which were duly delivered, the operators had also
done their duty in regard to the other two.
There were three kinds of ice mentioned in the messages - (1) bergs, or large
icebergs, composed of fresh water; (2) growlers, or small icebergs; and (3) field ice,
which consisted of frozen sea water floating on top and was comparatively
insignificant.
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At 20 minutes to 12 on the forenoon of the 14th, the very day of the accident, a
message was received from the steamship Caronia as follows:-
"Captain, Titanic. Westbound steamers report bergs, growlers, and field ice in
42° N. from 49° to 51° W. April 12. Compliments."
That message admittedly reached the hands of the officers of the ship. Its
importance is that it reported that ice had been found two days before on the
course which the Titanic was taking. At twenty minutes to 2 that same day a
further message was received from the steamship Baltic. That was as follows:-
"Captain Smith, Titanic. Have had moderate variable winds, fine weather, since
leaving. Greek steamer Athenai reports passing icebergs and large quantities of
field ice to-day in lat. 41° 51' N. and long. 49° 52' W."
That again was a plain direction to the Titanic to look out for icebergs, growlers
and field ice in front.
The Managing Director of the defendants' company, Mr Ismay, was on board
the Titanic at the time. He received that message, and it also reached the hands of
the captain. The next message was a little later, and was received at 1.45. That
was a message from a German steamer, the Amerika, and it said:-
"Amerika passed two large icebergs in 41° 27' N., 50° 8’ W. on April 14."
This was one of the messages which it would be suggested did not reach the
hands of the officer. The gentleman who received it on the day was the operator
who sacrificed his life to duty, and he, Mr Campbell, would ask them to assume
that he did his duty in connection with this message, which was to hand the
message to some responsible officer on the ship.
He would ask them to assume that still more, because the Master, the first and
second officers [sic], and other officers were all dead and gone.
At 7.30pm a fourth message was received from a ship called the California [sic]
to another steamship called the Antillian. The Titanic picked up this message in
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its own Marconi room, and it was received by Mr Bride, the surviving officer, who
approved it. He handed it to one of the officers. The message read as follows:
"To Captain, Antillian. 6.30pm apparent ship's time. Lat. 42° 3' N, long 49° 9'
W. Three large bergs five miles to southward of us."
Could responsible officers get more definite warnings than these, some of them
given by the captains of ships not connected with their own company?
The next message was received by Mr Phillips, the operator who was drowned,
and was from the captain of a ship named the Mesaba and was as follows:-
"From Mesaba to Titanic and all Eastbound ships. Ice reported in lat. 42° N. to
41° 25' N., long. 49° to 50° 30' W. Saw much heavy pack ice and great number
large icebergs, also field ice. Weather good, clear."
It could not be proved that this message was handed to an officer, but the
previous message had been delivered, and, this message being a very grave one,
the jury would, he thought, be glad to make the assumption that this brave man
had done his duty by handing it on. It was not vital whether it was passed on or
not because through the knowledge of every officer on the ship they were in a
dangerous region on account of ice.
Other matters of grave importance had to be considered with regard to the
conduct of affairs that night. The state of the sea was exceptional. It was a dead
calm, and the night was starlight. It was said that a dead calm made it more
difficult to detect icebergs in front. These icebergs were of gigantic size. The one
causing the collision projected sixty feet above the surface of the sea, and that
represented only one-eighth of the total bulk of the berg. If there was a little swell
or roughness on the sea it broke against the edges of the iceberg and caused a
certain amount of foam which could be seen at some distance.
That night, owing to the calm, there was an absence of this effect, and that
being so, precautions were still more essential than usual. There was another
important matter. In addition to the dead calm, there was a sudden fall in
temperature of nearly 10 degrees. That was no necessary indication of the
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presence of ice, but added to the knowledge the officers had of its nearness, it
was another warning of a grave kind.
GROSS NEGLIGENCE CHARGED
These being the conditions, it was hardly to be credited, when one remembered
the three messages indisputably received by the officers, that this ship should
continue at the rate of 25 [land] miles an hour until it struck. But it did.
The question of negligence they had to consider was one of degree, and he could
conceive no case in which the admitted facts more conclusively proved gross
negligence than the present.
They could have gone more south and avoided the ice, or slowed down. What
happened? This enormous obstacle was not seen by any official on the ship until
they were within 500 yards of it. The vessel travelled that distance in 37 seconds,
and, having failed to take any precautions, nothing could then be done.
They had not abated the full speed of the vessel through the danger zone, and
although they saw the berg 500 yards away they were unable, owing to the speed
of the ship, to deflect it so as to pass safely by. Why was not the iceberg detected
before? He believed it would be established that the berg could have been seen a
mile away. Why was it not seen?
There was no increase that night in the number of the look-out. It consisted of
two men in the crow’s nest and an officer on the bridge – the ordinary watch in
perfect weather on a safe route.
The grave omission was this. These icebergs, when looked on from a height,
were not as easy to detect as if you were on a plane with them. There should have
been a stemhead look-out, who would have seen the berg without having to look
down on it from above. The look-out men had had glasses from Belfast to
Southampton, but at Southampton they were taken from them. They would say
that if they had had glasses they could have detected the ice much sooner than
they did.
There was another matter to which he attached importance. He did not say
there was any gross negligence on the part of the defendants in having boats for
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only 1,100. The defendants’ answer would be that they had as many as the Board
of Trade required.
That was no answer, because the Board of Trade requirement was only a
minimum, and if they chose to embark 2,100 people they ought to have sufficient
boats to carry all on board in case of an accident, unlikely but not unknown.
Even if that was not negligence, the knowledge that they only had boats to
carry 1,100 ought to have made them redouble their anxiety and their
precautions.
One other matter. The defendants said in their answer to interrogatories that
their men had received no training in lowering and manning the boats, and while
he wished to give the highest credit to the discipline and courage of all the
officials of the ship, the lack of drill caused great confusion and contributed to
the loss of life.
The defendants were in this dilemma. Assume their case was that the
conditions were so unfavourable that they could not see a berg until it was quite
close, what was their excuse for not reducing speed? If, on the other hand, the
conditions were so favourable that they could see the berg easily, why did they
not see it? The omission to do so was damning evidence of negligence.
CONDITIONS ON THE TICKET
There was another point in the case which was not devoid of interest, because a
little bird informed him that the defendants would fight it up to the House of
Lords. The point was this: the legislature had been very particular in seeing that
steerage passengers were protected in making voyages, and there were provisions
that every steerage passenger should have a certain amount of accommodation
and diet. The law protected them against their want of education and also any
attempt of the company to deprive them of their rights.
One of the precautions was that the tickets supplied them on taking a passage
should be in a form provided by the Board of Trade. In 1904, the Board of Trade
prescribed a form of ticket which should have been supplied to the plaintiff. The
common law liability of a railway company or ship which carried persons was
that they were not insurers of passengers.
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If a man was killed by accident, neither the railway nor the shipping company
would be liable. They would only be so if death resulted from want of care. When
the defendants issued their ticket, they inserted, as he suggested illegally, a
number of conditions on the back.
One of these exempted them from liability for any cause whatever. His
suggestion was that that condition should not be there at all. The Act of
Parliament said the ticket was to be in a certain form, and it was not to contain
anything on its face that was not authorised. The defendants would say that the
conditions in question appeared on the back and not on the face of the ticket and
were therefore in the form prescribed by the Board of Trade.
He could not think that that was the proper construction of the Act. And he
should ask His Lordship so to hold. If the matter was left over for future
discussion, two questions of fact might arise for the jury – (1) Did the plaintiffs
know the conditions on the back of the ticket? and, (2) If not, did the company
take proper steps to bring them to their notice?
He could not put the people who took the tickets into the box, because they
were drowned, but so far as Ryan was concerned he had little opportunity of
seeing the ticket because, as he had said, one ticket was given to Moran with
three names on it.
He would ask them to assume that Moran had kept the ticket. Did the company
take any steps to bring home to the knowledge of this young fellow that this
extraordinary condition was on the back?
A little slip was fixed across the ticket which did not call attention to anything
on the back, and the only reference to the conditions on the back were the words
“See Back” in small letters at the bottom of the face of the ticket.
The contracts that the defendants were endeavouring to enforce was a very
stringent one, and there was therefore a greater onus on them to bring it to the
passengers’ notice. It was in the following terms:-
“Neither the ship owner, agent, or passage-broker shall be liable to any
passenger carried under this contract for loss, damage, or delay to the passenger
or his baggage arising from the act of God, public enemies, arrests or restraints of
princes, rulers, or people, fire, collision, stranding, perils of the sea, rivers, or
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navigation of any kind, &c., even though the loss, damage, or delay may have
been caused or contributed to by the neglect or default of the ship owner’s
servants or other persons for whose acts he would otherwise be responsible, and
whether occurring on board this or any other vessel on which the passenger may
be forwarded under this contract.”
It would require strong proof, said counsel, to show that the defendants called the
attention of passengers to this very stringent condition. In answer to
interrogatories the defendants said they had taken no step with regard to doing
so beyond pasting a slip on the front of the ticket, and it would be for the jury to
say whether that was sufficient notice in the case of steerage passengers.
At the conclusion of Mr Campbell’s opening statement, Mr Justice Bailhache
said he would like to know the exact position of the Titanic at the time of the
accident.
Mr Campbell said it was in latitude 41° 46’ N., longitude 50° 14’ W.
MARCONI OPERATORS EXAMINED
Mr HAROLD BRIDE, examined by Mr Campbell, said he was a certified official of
the Marconi company and was appointed to be one of their operators on the
Titanic. The senior operator was Mr Phillips. Mr Phillips kept watch from 8 in the
evening to 2 in the morning and he (the witness) from 2 in the morning until 8 in
the morning. For the rest of the day, one or other of them kept a continuous
watch.
The only Marconigram with regard to ice on April 14 that he recollected was one
originating on the Antillian. The text of the message related to three large
icebergs, and gave their latitude and longitude. Their duty with regard to
messages affecting the navigation of the ship was to deliver them to a responsible
officer. So far as he was concerned, that duty was performed.
Phillips was on duty from 8 o'clock until the time the vessel struck. When he
(the witness) joined the ship he signed the articles as one of the crew. At the time
of the collision he was in bed. He was called to relieve Phillips that night at 12
o'clock by special arrangement. After the collision they did not know what the
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vessel had struck, as they did not go outside. They were both in the Marconi
room, and Phillips was attending to his work.
The captain, the chief officer and the first officer were all drowned. When a
message arrived, a duplicate would be made, which would be sent to the Marconi
Company. The messages which arrived on the day of the accident went down with
the ship. There was no special messenger deputed to the messages to the captain,
as his quarters were so close that they took them themselves.
Cross-examined by Mr Duke - He had no personal recollection of any other
message before the collision than the one of which he had spoken. When Phillips
went on duty at 8 o'clock, he (Phillips) had three or four hours' work to do. When
he (the witness) went on duty, Phillips did not communicate to him that he had
received any message relating to the navigation of the ship.
Mr Duke - I think it was a sheer accident that you did not share Phillips' fate.
You both worked down to the time when an order was given you to leave. You
were washed off the deck and Phillips was drowned? - Yes.
Re-examined - Telegrams regarding the navigation of the ship has priority over
private messages. If he had received a message saying there was heavy ice in the
neighbourhood he should have reported it immediately. That was his practice and
Phillips's as well.
Mr GEORGE ELLIOTT TURNBULL, the assistant manager of the Marconi
Company, said that there was an installation on the Titanic of the latest type.
Messages could be received at a greater distance than they could be transmitted.
They could be received at a distance of 1,500 miles and they could be sent 350
miles - that was the guaranteed normal figure. They had installations on other
ships.
Mr Duke said he would take his objection at once that this witness could not
prove messages sent from other ships.
The witness stood down and Mr STANLEY HOWARD ADAMS was called. He
said that he was the wireless operator on board the Mesaba. He received from the
captain of that ship an ice report with instructions to transmit that message, and
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he transmitted it to the Titanic amongst other ships. It was his duty to enter in is
book the message, and this he did. It was sent at 7.50pm New York time.
How would that compare with English time? - Five hours earlier.
The message was - "Ice report in lat 42° N to 41° 25' N., long. 49° to long 50° 30'
W. Saw much heavy pack ice and great number large icebergs. Also field ice.
Weather good, clear." He received from the Titanic an acknowledgement of that
message.
Cross-examined by Mr Duke, the witness said that he subsequently found that
the Titanic operator was in active communication with Cape Race, or rather trying
to get into communication with Cape Race. That went on for a long time. The
answer was, "Received, thanks," which meant that the operator had got it.
He stood by for a long time to see if Captain Smith had got the message and
was replying to it. The captain usually sent a reply. He got no reply from the
captain of the Titanic. During this time he drew the inference that Phillips was
trying to get on to Cape Race.
Re-examined by Mr Campbell, he said he had been an operator for three years.
Messages regarding the navigation of the ship had priority – those of distress
first. This message should have been delivered to the captain of the Titanic at
once. There was nothing as far as he knew to prevent it being delivered as soon
as it was received.
EVIDENCE OF MAN ON WATCH DUTY
JOSEPH SCARROTT said he was an A.B. on board the Titanic in April. He was
on watch duty the night of the disaster. He was on the upper deck at the time the
vessel struck the berg. He saw that she had struck an iceberg shortly after the
impact. His watch was from 8 to 12. His duty was to "stand by" for any orders
that were given.
The iceberg was about as high as the boat deck of the ship - at least 50ft above
the waterline. Two men were on the look-out in the crow's nest. There were two
men there night and day.
Any other look-out? - Not to my knowledge.
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There was no look-out man in the stemhead of the vessel. He had been an A.B.
for 15 years.
Would a man at the stemhead have a better opportunity of look-out than a man
in the crow's nest? - That would depend upon the atmosphere. He thought the
iceberg could have been seen for about 1,000 yards from the crow's nest.
Would powerful glasses assist you? - I prefer glasses.
He had heard conversation among the crew that night to the effect that they
were expecting ice. He noticed nothing being done with regard to the ship's
course just before the accident.
CROW'S NEST MAN AS WITNESS
REGINALD ROBINSON LEE said he was an A.B. He was not now in the
employment of the defendants. He was in April of last year. He had often been
employed as a look-out man. He was on the look-out in the Titanic on this night.
Fleet and he occupied the crow's nest. When they relieved the other look-out men
they received instructions to look out for ice and growlers. The sea was calm; the
sky was clear. It was cold. There was a haze on the water.
He saw the berg and said that was ice and it was immediately 'phoned through.
It could not have been very far away when it was first seen. The words used on
the 'phone were "Ice" or "Iceberg right ahead." He had sailed on that journey very
often. The conditions that night were not favourable for a clear view.
Up to the time he gave the signal there had been no decrease in the speed of the
ship. A portion of the berg was above the haze. When he saw the berg he did not
think he could see the lower part of it below the haze. If the whole berg had been
covered with haze he would not have seen it so soon.
From the time you saw the berg, was it possible to avoid the berg? - Half a
minute more would have been enough to avoid it.
As they struck the ship was veering over to port. That was how it was she was
wrecked on the starboard side. He believed that glasses were supplied to the men
on the look-out. He had used them, but generally private ones. They were not
supplied on this occasion. The officers used them. They were of use in defining
what had been seen.
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Cross-examined by Mr Duke - he used to work as a look-out man when he was
in the Navy, though that was not his work. He was not examined for a sight test.
He had been a look-out man on the Minnehaha. If a man had good eyesight he
could pick the thing up and would have no use for glasses.
When he picked out anything he would report it at once to the bridge. As a rule
the officers could pick up things with their glasses before the look-out men saw
them in the crow's nest. He went into the crow's nest at 10pm. The sky was clear;
the sea was not. There was a haze, as seen when one looked for the horizon.
Was there any kind of haze within half a mile of the ship? - I think there was.
There was none round the ship.
Mr Murdoch was on the bridge. Another officer was popping in and out of the
chart-room. He thought it was Mr Low [sic]. He came down from the crow's nest
when he was relieved at 12 o'clock. At that time it was not clear at the horizon.
He thought the haze was extending all round the horizon within a certain locality.
When they were in the boats they could see a further distance.
When in the boat he saw the lights of a vessel; he could not say how far it was
away. He did not know that they were signalling to that vessel before on the
Titanic. He knew that they were signalling. The berg faced the ship with its dark
side. He had seen a berg which presented its dark side when off St John's,
Newfoundland. The reason he did not see this berg before was because it
presented its dark side.
He thought he might have seen it some minutes earlier if it had presented the
ordinary appearance of ice. It was higher than the fo'c'sle. It was as high as the
boat deck. He had known the North Atlantic without a swell before this occasion.
The sea was quite smooth. It was most unusual; it was an oily sea.
And so there was no lipper of water about the iceberg as it came along; it would
have made breakers and they could have seen it. In the ordinary conditions of the
sea in the North Atlantic he would have detected the iceberg before. Two or three
hours after he left the ship a breeze sprang up. He knew it was a flat clam before
he got into the boat.
Re-examined - That condition of a flat clam would be apparent to any one on
the look-out. There was nothing extraordinary in this iceberg having a dark side.
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FURTHER LOOK-OUT EVIDENCE
GEORGE SYMONS said he had been a seaman for nine years and had been
employed by the Oceanic people for six years. He had been a look-out man for
them for four years. He had travelled this journey many times and he knew the
route well. He was in the crow's nest from 2 to 4pm and from 8 to 10pm. Before
he went on at 8 he had received no direction as to ice.
There was a clear sky and a flat clam, so that any officer in charge would have
seen the flat calm from at least 8 o'clock. He had no glasses. He preferred them.
He had always had glasses on the Oceanic. The order he had received later was to
"keep a sharp look-out for ice and growlers." he passed that message on to those
who relieved him.
It was rather chilly. There was a slight haze on the water obscuring the view of
the sky-line. It was about the same in their watch throughout the two hours.
There was no-one on the stemhead of the ship. There was no need for any extra
look-out man. He had smelt the ice. To his own mate he had spoken of this at 9
o'clock.
Cross-examined by Mr Duke - There were plenty of men to put on any look-out
work that was deemed necessary. There was no use in any extra look-out. A
stemhead look-out was of use in a fog; it was of no use that night. At 10 o'clock
he went below. He had seen the light of a ship about five miles away when
launching No. 3 boat. It was, as he had said in America, a very clear night. He
preferred to use his own eyes to pick up an object; the use of glasses was of use
to pick up a known object. The only thing he preferred glasses for was to find a
known object or to define anything he had seen or thought he had seen with his
eyes. The officers on the bridge had a telescope and one had to be very quick.
Mr Campbell said he understood that the solicitors would see whether they
could agree on a chart point. He also understood that he need not call the
witness from the Board of Trade to produce the ship’s Articles.
It was agreed that the persons in respect of whose deaths the plaintiffs were
suing were passengers on the Titanic and were drowned.
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He would also produce the order of the Board of Trade as to the ticket. He
called for the production of a letter of instructions from the owners to the
captains of this line in taking command. This was produced. A passage from it
was read by Mr Campbell, which was as follows:-
“In placing the steamer temporarily under your command, we desire to direct
your attention to the company’s regulations for the safe and efficient navigation of
its vessels, and also want to impress upon you in the most forcible manner the
paramount and vital importance of exercising the utmost caution in the navigation
of the ship, in that the safety of the passengers and the crew weighs with us above
and before all other considerations.”
This closed the plaintiffs’ case.
CASE FOR THE DEFENCE OPENED
Mr Duke, in opening the case for the defendants, said that what was relied on
here was not that Captain Smith and the other officers of the Titanic fell into
some error of judgment, but that they were guilty of a lack of ordinary and
reasonable care. That was an appalling proposition.
Captain Smith was as fine and capable and high-minded a seaman as ever
sailed the seas. Captain Smith and his officers, with the exception of those
ordered to take charge of the boats, sacrificed their lives in the discharge of their
duty. He was sure the jury would realise was a terrible proposition it was into
which they were asked to assent. The men who were involved had been the pick
of the merchant service of this country.
The Titanic was the finest product of modern shipbuilding. He need hardly refer
to the sordid question of money, but the vessel represented a million and a half of
money. The defendants were to a considerable extent their own insurers, so that
loss would fall on them.
The ship was as well found as a ship could be, and its boat service was larger
than that which had been laid down in the regulations of the Board of Trade. She
was commanded by a staff of officers most of whom held a certificate of a Master
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or of an Extra Master. The crew was composed of a sufficient and capable body of
seamen.
The vessel had sailed from Southampton under instructions to the
commanding officer, a passage of which had been read by Mr Campbell. If there
was any sort of accident in the course of the voyage an officer lost the bonus to
which he would otherwise become entitled.
What were the complaints made? A good deal had been said about speed. He
would be able to show them that the maximum speed at which the Titanic was
sailed was from two to five knots below the speed at which several of the
competing lines ran their ships.
“THE CORNER.”
There was a point on this route at which ships that had been sailing south-west
changed their course to west. It was known as “the corner.” Captain Smith fixed
this turning about ten miles south of the usual place. He had told no-one why he
had done this. If Captain Smith did not know the proper place where to turn in
the circumstances, there was no-one, and certainly no-one who had been called
on behalf of the plaintiffs, who could give the jury better information.
What had happened was one of the hazards of the sea. If it had been
approached in a seamanlike way, it would not be true to say that there had been
negligence on the part of the captain.
It was said that the captain had been warned of the presence of ice and had
disregarded the warnings. Every warning had in fact been taken into account.
That day, and every day, the rule was that such a note should be fixed up in a
conspicuous position for those concerned to see. That had been done. The
survivors would tell the jury what had been done: how the course had been
worked out and the probable position of the ice ascertained.
His suggestion was that this was the reason why Captain Smith altered the
turning point, a decision which involved a slight prolongation of the voyage.
The message that had been referred to, which Phillips had received, did not
reach the Captain. The operator from the transmitting ship said that he had
waited an hour for a reply from Captain Smith in accordance with the usual
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custom, but he had not received it. He had only received the acknowledgement of
the receipt of the message from Phillips. From the agreements which had been
put in, it appeared that the operators on board the Titanic were the servants of
the Marconi Company.
If a message were sent to the ship or her captain they undertook to deliver it;
but they were the servants of the Marconi Company and they manipulated the
Marconi installation for the profit of the Marconi Company. The jury would not
think much turned upon this Marconigram, because everyone knew that there
was ice in the region. If there had been a failure of duty, it was a failure on the
part of a servant of another company.
SPEED AND LOOK-OUT
It was said that in these circumstances it was negligence to maintain this
speed. Captain Smith and each one of the officers was responsible for the safety
of the ship; yet it had not occurred to any one of them that they were not doing
the proper thing in keeping on this speed.
Where were the seamen of any position or responsibility who said that it was a
negligent thing to navigate the Atlantic in these circumstances at that speed? The
jury would be told by his witnesses that in the presence of ice the safest course
was to keep a sharp look-out and to go ahead at full speed and get out of the ice
region.
If there was an impact, the momentum of the iceberg with seven-eighths of its
bulk below the surface was such that it was necessarily fatal to the weaker
vessels. If Captain Smith had departed from this practice they would not have
had one or two plaintiffs, but a shoal of plaintiffs who would have based their
claims on the departure from the established practice.
This, then, was the reason why this speed was maintained.
Then it was said that they had not kept a proper look-out. But the plaintiffs’
evidence was that they had had two men in the crow’s-nest and officers scouring
the sea with their telescopes. The complaint was made that the look-out men had
not glasses. Yet every one of the witnesses for the plaintiffs had agreed that there
was a difference of opinion amongst sailors on this matter, and the evidence was
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that the glasses were of use after an object had been sighted and a message sent
on the ‘phone to confirm the sight with the naked eye.
They would hear that care was taken that the look-out men should be men with
excellent sight. Lee had said that the reason the berg was not sighted sooner was
because it had presented its dark side to the ship, and the dead calm and
absence of swell prevented any lapping at the foot of the berg that could have
been seen.
It had been said there was a fall in the temperature, and so there was; but he
need hardly say that this might have been due to a number of causes.
These, then, were the complaints made – that the boat accommodation was
insufficient; the course taken wrong, the speed excessive, and a good look-out
lacking. He would submit at the proper time that they one and all failed.
The question in issue was not merely one of money, but one of general concern,
involving not only the owners of this ship, who had done their best to equip and
despatch her, but also those who had officered her – the flower of the merchant
service.
The court then adjourned until 11am on Monday.
DAY II Monday, June 23, 1913.
EVIDENCE OF THE SECOND OFFICER
Mr CHARLES HERBERT LIGHTOLLER, examined by Mr Maurice Hill, said that
he was the Second Officer in the Titanic. The chart produced to him was an
enlargement of an Admiralty chart. It showed the position in the Titanic sank, and
the course which she had taken. It should also where the ice reported by the
Caronia on April 12th and that reported by the Baltic and the Californian on April
14th was.
He was in a position to mark on the chart where the ice reported in the Mesaba
message was (that being one of the messages not being admitted by the
defendants to have been received by any officer in the Titanic).
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He held a commission as sub-lieutenant in the Royal Naval Reserve. He had
been thirteen years with the White Star Line, and had 24 years’ experience of the
sea, twenty of which were in the North Atlantic. He joined the ship at Belfast.
There were six officers on board in addition to the captain, of whom three, in
addition to Captain Smith, lost their lives.
There were eight quartermasters. There were six special men for the look-out
who had no other duties. They were usually selected from the personal knowledge
of the men and their capacity as look-outs. The officers taking charge of the
bridge were the Chief Officer and the First and Second Officers. There were
always two junior officers on duty as well.
On April 14 he was on duty from 6 to 10 in the morning, and from 6 to 10 in
the evening. He was relieved for dinner at five minutes to 7 for half an hour. Some
ice messages were received on board the Titanic. He had in mind longitude 49°
51’ W. as being the longitude where they might anticipate ice. The pace a berg
travelled varied between one and three knots.
They would enter longitude 49° about 9.30pm that night. The Marconigrams
reporting ice were known among the officers. At 9.40pm he was in charge of the
bridge until 10 o’clock when he was relieved. He never heard of any message from
the Mesaba on board the ship. While he was on the watch neither Phillips nor
anybody from him brought any message to the bridge.
While he was in charge of the bridge from 6 to 10 the weather was perfectly
clear. It was a perfect night for seeing lights, and there was no wind and very little
sea. The duty of the officer on the bridge was to be in charge of the ship. He
tended mainly to the navigation, but other matters were reported to him. In no
circumstances was he allowed to leave the bridge while on duty.
He also kept a look-out, as well as having two men in the crow’s nest. On that
night there was no swell. It was not until the boats were lowered that this was felt
to be the case. The temperature was taken from time to time. The was a fall of 10
deg. during his watch. That was no indication of the presence of ice.
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A TALK WITH THE CAPTAIN
During his watch the captain came on the bridge at five minutes to 9 and
stayed there for half an hour. They had a conversation. The captain’s first remark
was that it was very cold. He spoke generally about the weather. They discussed
the question of ice. They knew they were soon entering the reported area, and
they agreed that they would be able to see ice three or four miles away. He (the
witness) said that it was a pity there was no wind, as if there was it would make a
ripple at the base of the berg which would make it more easily seen.
When the captain left, he said that he would be just inside his navigating room
and told him to let him know immediately if the weather became dull. He (the
witness) sent word to the crow’s nest to keep a sharp look-out for icebergs. At ten
he was relieved by Mr Murdoch, the first officer. He passed on the instructions he
had received to him. After leaving the bridge, it was his practice to go around the
ship. That occupied half to three quarters of an hour.
By the time he turned in there was no change in the weather. On such a night
a berg could be seen at least three miles. He was in his bunk when the shock of
the collision came. When he went on deck the weather was then identically the
same, perfectly calm and clear.
He superintended the launching of the boats. In the time they had before the
Titanic sank they were able to launch all the boats but one. He was working at
one himself when he was washed overboard. He did not think that a look-out on
the stemhead would have been of the slightest value. They used a stemhead look-
out if the weather was slightly thick. On such a night as that, there would have
been no advantage in having a stemhead look-out for ice.
THE USE OF GLASSES
With regard to glasses, if he thought the men would have used glasses for
looking for ice he would not have allowed them to have them. The duty of the men
was to look out, and the glasses limited the field of the look-out’s vision. The
practice in all the companies in which he served was to maintain the course and
speed when going through the ice belt in the Atlantic in clear weather.
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Cross-examined by Mr Campbell – He could only be certain of having seen the
Marconigram referring to ice in longitude 49° 51’ W. He heard nothing of that
message until lunch time. He had heard that Mr Ismay, the Managing Director of
the defendants, had received a Marconigram. He had no recollection of seeing it,
nor of seeing the message from the Antillian. The latter was not delivered on the
bridge while he was there.
The practice was to put the messages in the chart room. The only one he took
any notice of was that referring to longitude 49° 51’ W. He understood that
another officer, Mr Moody, calculated that they would reach the ice at 11pm. He
(the witness) did not inform him that he had calculated the time at 9.30 o’clock.
Mr Moody had nothing to do with the navigation of the ship.
He could not say off-hand at what distance the Titanic, going at 25 miles an
hour, could be brought to a dead stop. It would be about a quarter of a mile on
the night in question. One of the most important duties of the officer on the
bridge was the look-out. He would see an iceberg as soon as, if not before, the
man in the crow’s nest.
A growler was more difficult to see than an iceberg. That night one could have
been seen about a mile away. Except for the fact that there was a flat calm (i.e.,
no wind), there conditions were apparently favourable for the detection of an
iceberg. As the captain left the bridge after their conversation, he, Captain Smith,
had said: “If it is going to be hazy, we shall have to go very slow.”
He did not remember whether he passed that observation on to Murdoch. The
ship’s speed was never altered that night. Before the ship started on the voyage, a
report was made to him that the look-outs had no glasses. He reported the matter
to his senior officer and was told that there were none available.
THE COURSE OF THE VESSEL
The ship in her course went ten miles south of the usual turning point on the
lane route. They never got back to the lane route and were five or six miles from it
when the collision occurred. The morning after the collision they saw a good
many icebergs, some of them very large.
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If he had seen the haze spoken of by the look-out men, he would have reported
it to the Master, and if necessary reduced the speed of the ship on his own
initiative. He had reason to doubt the evidence given by the look-out men as to
the existence of haze. He did not believe there was any haze.
The reasons why the berg could not be seen were – (1) no moon; (2) no ripple;
(3) black side of the berg; and (4) no swell. If the iceberg was seen 500 yards
away, he did not think that the accident was inevitable. If the helm had been
whipped over and one of the engines put astern, the Titanic might possibly have
cleared the berg.
After the receipt of the Marconigrams, a ten hours’ divergence to the south
would have avoided all risks.
Re-examined – If they had gone ten hours south, it would have taken them
below the Gulf Stream. He did not regard it as a seamanlike suggestion.
THE UNPRECEDENTED CALM
He could only faintly recall having seen black ice in the Atlantic on one
occasion. If the iceberg was black it would be almost impossible to see it from the
crow’s nest or anywhere else in time to avoid the collision. He had only once seen
a flat sea on the North Atlantic and that was on the occasion of the loss of the
Titanic. They only found it out after the boats were lowered, and in his experience
it was unprecedented.
After the sinking of the Titanic he had a conversation in the Carpathia with the
look-out men. Nothing was said about a haze before the collision. He first heard
the suggestion at the Commission before Lord Mersey.
THE FOURTH OFFICER’S EVIDENCE
Mr JOSEPH GROVES BOXHALL, examined by Mr Duke, said that he held an
extra master’s certificate and was also a sub-lieutenant in the Royal Naval
Reserve. He was the Fourth Officer in the Titanic.
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He remembered seeing two messages with regard to ice; one was on April 12th
and the other on the 14th, which warned of ice in longitude 49° 51’ W. On the 14th
he was on duty between 4 and 6. Mr Wilde, the Chief Officer, was in the charge of
the ship, and he and Mr Moody were the junior officers with him.
When he went off duty at 6pm there was little wind and the sea was smooth.
The weather was fine was fine and everything was favourable for looking out. He
went on duty again at 8. Mr Lightoller was then in charge. He (the witness)
remained on duty until the time of collision. While he was on duty he saw
Captain Smith on the bridge from time to time. He also saw him in the navigation
room with the chart before him. He was pricking out the ship’s position at
7.30pm on stellar observations made by him (the witness).
He remembered the collision at 11.40. The weather was then perfectly clear all
round, with no sign of haze or fog. He was between the officers’ quarters and the
bridge at the time of the collision. He saw the engine room telegraph. It pointed to
full speed astern.
He heard the captain ask Mr Murdoch what they had struck after the collision.
Murdoch said they had struck an iceberg and that he had signalled full speed
astern, and had tried to go to starboard, but had not had time. He looked over the
side and thought he saw a dark mass with no light about it. He assisted with
the boats and was ordered by Captain Smith to get into one of the last which got
away.
Before leaving the Titanic he saw the masthead lights of another steamer in the
distance.
He was ordered to signal to her, and did for a considerable time. She was
approximately five miles away. There was no haze which interfered with his view.
THE THIRD OFFICER’S EVIDENCE
Mr HERBERT JOHN PITMAN, examined by Mr Raeburn, said he was Third
Officer on the Titanic. On April 14th he was on watch from noon until 4, and from
6 to 8 in the evening. In the course of the day he became aware that they were
approaching a neighbourhood in which ice might be seen.
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Between 6 and 8 the weather was perfectly clear. At the time of the collision he
was asleep. He went on deck about five minutes later. He did not see the iceberg.
He assisted in getting the passengers into the boat and was finally ordered by Mr
Murdoch into No. 5 boat.
The sea was absolutely smooth. In 16 years experience he had never seen the
Atlantic like it before. When he got into the boat he saw the light of a vessel about
two miles away.
THE FIFTH OFFICER’S EVIDENCE
Mr HAROLD GODFREY LOWE, examined by Mr Hill, said he was Fifth Officer
in the Titanic and had a sub-lieutenant’s commission in the Royal Naval Reserve.
He was off duty at the time of the collision. When he went off duty at 8 the
weather was fine and clear. There was ho haze.
He was asleep at the time of the collision. When he came on deck the weather
was still the same, dark on the water and clear above. He saw a ship some four
miles away after the collision.
THE LOOK-OUT MEN
GEORGE ALFRED HOGG, examined by Mr Duke, said that he was a look-out
man in the Titanic. He had had his eyes tested some time before the voyage
began. He was on duty from 6 to 8, and from 12 to 2 on the night of the collision.
From 6 to 8 the weather was clear. He had no glasses, and would sooner trust
his own eyes. He was asleep at the time of the collision. He went to the crow’s
nest at 12 o’clock and saw a black object on the starboard quarter. The weather
was still clear.
Cross-examined by Mr Campbell – He joined his mates in asking for glasses at
Southampton. They were told there was plenty of time, and they would have them
later on.
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Re-examined by Mr Duke – If he had had the glasses he would not have used
them.
Evidence to the same effect was given by a FRANK EVANS, ARCHIE JEWELL
and FREDERICK FLEET, look-out men on board the Titanic. The last, in
examination by Mr Duke, said that he was on the look-out on the night of the
14th . When they relieved the two men on duty before, they were told to keep a
good look-out for icebergs and growlers.
There was a very slight haze on the horizon, but it did not hinder them in
performing their duties. Shortly before the collision he saw a black object right
ahead. He could not saw how long the interval was between seeing the berg and
the collision.
He struck three bells to indicate an object right ahead, and telephoned to the
bridge, receiving a reply. The ship’s head was brought to port; he could not say
how far. She was brought round before he left the telephone box. He saw the
actual collision. The iceberg appeared to be all black.
Cross-examined by Mr Campbell – He saw the haze about a quarter of an hour
before the accident. It was right ahead of him, and so was the ice. He had no
glasses that night. If he had had them he could have picked up the object soon
enough to have given notice in time to avoid the accident.
Re-examined by Mr Duke – Glasses were generally used for examining an object
after it had been picked up by the eyes.
TESTIMONY OF CAPTAIN CANNONS
Captain EDWIN GALTON CANNONS, examined by Mr Duke, said that he had
held a master’s certificate in the Mercantile Marine for 25 years. He was now in
the Atlantic Transport Company’s service, and had been in command of a
steamship for 25 years.
He remembered when the lane routes were agreed upon for the passage east or
west across the Atlantic. They were adopted by agreement between the companies
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carrying on the passenger traffic. A master of a vessel affected by these rules
could not deviate from the route without due cause.
He knew Captain Smith. He was an officer of great experience and high position
and a man they all admired.
Mr Duke – When you are in the North Atlantic and ice is reported, what is the
usual course with regard to speed in fair weather? – We maintain the course and
speed.
How long has that been the practice? – During the whole of my sea service.
Continuing, the witness said that the usual appearance of an iceberg at night
was that of an effulgent object throwing out a gleam which could be seen for
several miles. He had seen an iceberg capsize, and it was the colour of the sea. He
had only see that once, and that was by day. In ordinary circumstances an
iceberg can be seen at night at least four miles away.
He had never noticed the Atlantic flat and oily with no swell. Such a state of
things would be abnormal. With regard to glasses for look-out men, he did not
consider they were of any service at all. The men’s eyes were carefully tested, and
they ought to use them for picking up objects and then leave it to the officers to
ascertain what they were.
In hazy weather or fog, he would place a man on the stemhead. He would add
little or nothing to the range of vision, being much lower down. The fall in
temperature on board a ship was no indication of the immediate presence of ice.
Cross-examined by Mr Campbell – He had never seen black ice. It was a novelty
to him.
The further hearing was adjourned until tomorrow.
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DAY III Tuesday, June 24, 1913.
CAPTAIN E. G. Cannons, of the Atlantic Transport Company, who was called as
an expert witness on behalf of the defendants, was further cross-examined by Mr
Campbell.
He had received as many as four messages a day concerning ice, but it was an
unusual occurrence. If all the five Marconigrams referred to in the case had been
received by responsible officers they would have indicated a particularly
dangerous area.
If he knew he was approaching such an area, he would take the precaution of
slowing up until the night was clear. Upon the information given in the three
admitted Marconigrams he would not have considered it his duty to slow up. The
Marconigrams appeared to him to report ice north of the track.
In those circumstances, he would maintain his speed by night or day in clear
weather, and would not have deviated form the ordinary course. The Mesaba
report was more alarming than the first three. Assuming that he had received it,
he would, if nothing were sighted, have navigated to the first longitude mentioned
at full speed, having everybody on the alert, and would then have eased up.
With his own ship, whose speed was 16 knots, if he sighted a berg straight
ahead he could alter her course so as to avoid it in sixteen seconds. The
mentioned in the Caronia message would, in all probability, travel to the east and
possibly a little north, being in the influence of the Gulf Stream.
The ice mentioned in the Baltic message would be travelling in the same
direction, and that referred to in the Antillian message would have a tendency to
travel almost due east.
Re-examined by Mr Duke - The action on the wind on the exposed part of a
berg might counteract the effect of the current on the submerged part. In the
neighbourhood of an abundance of ice the atmosphere had a tendency to become
hazy or foggy. Sometimes it was necessary to come to a standstill in a fog if ice
had been sighted, and then there was the danger that a berg might come into
collision with the vessel.
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By His Lordship – Icebergs occasionally turned turtle and came up again. It was
a sight which, once seen was never forgotten. When the berg came up, the ice was
a bluish colour, but after exposure to the air became white again.
PRECAUTIONS IN THE ICE AREA
Captain JOHN PRITCHARD, examined by Mr Hill, said he was a retired
commander of the Cunard line. He had been 30 years in their service, and had
been in command of a ship for eighteen years. He had travelled between Liverpool
and New York, and the last ship that he commanded was the Mauretania.
She had a speed of 26 knots, or 26¼ miles an hour. She and the Lusitania were
the fastest ships afloat. In clear weather his practice as to maintain his course
and speed in the ice area until he saw ice. Icebergs were like white hills, and on a
clear dark night they could be seen four miles off. If there was a moon they could
be seen further away.
In clear weather he would have two look-out men in the crow’s nest and two
officers on the bridge. In fogt he would have men on the stemhead. He did not
believe in supplying look-out men with glasses and never did so.
Cross-examined by Mr Campbell – It was not much use to take the temperature
with a view to ascertaining the neighbourhood of ice. They did it every half hour
because it was the company’s rule to do so. He had never seen black ice, and in
fact in thirty years he had seen very few icebergs.
He had never received five Marconigrams in one day giving notice of ice. That
would be an unusual thing. In clear weather he would not reduce speed in the
neighbourhood of ice. If it were hazy he would slow down.
Re-examined – He could stop the Mauretania, going 26 knots, in three –quarters
of a mile, and could change her course in ten seconds.
Captain GERHARD CHRISTOPHER APFELD, examined by Mr Raeburn, said
that for the last six year he had been Marine Superintendent to the Red Star Line.
Before then he had had 39 years sea experience, of which 31 had been in the
service of the Red Star.
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He had had considerable experience in navigating in the ice region of the North
Atlantic. In clear weather it was his practice to maintain course and speed. On a
clear dark night an iceberg could be seen about four miles away. A fall in
temperature was no indication of the nearness of ice. He had known the
temperature rise to 54 or 56 degrees within a mile or a mile and a half of an
iceberg.
Captain BERTRAM FOX HAYES, examined by Mr Hill, said he held an extra
master’s certificate and was a commander in the Royal Naval Reserve on the
active list. He went to sea in 1880 and joined the White Star Line in 1889. He had
had large experience of crossing the Atlantic.
In clear weather in the ice region it was his practice to maintain his course at
full speed. When he received reports of ice in clear weather, his practice was to
carry on the ordinary routine of the ship. The danger of the ice region was not a
danger of ice, but a danger of fog.
In clear weather a berg could b seen from five to six miles away at night. His
rule was to have two men in the crow’s nest as a look-out, and only to have a
man at the stemhead in hazy weather. He was against glasses for look-out men.
He was an officer under Captain Smith for five or six years.
He (Captain Smith) was a careful navigator, and never took a risk or in his
opinion came to an unwise decision. He also knew Mr Murdoch, who had been an
officer under him. He was a capable, efficient, and zealous officer.
Cross-examined by Mr Campbell – If he had reason to suppose that he was
coming into an area where icebergs and growlers were very thick, he would go full
speed until he saw the ice.
Captain ROBERTS, examined by Mr Raeburn, said that he had had 37 years’
sea experience and held a British and also an American master’s certificate. For
18 years he had commanded ships in the American Line. He was at present
captain of the New York.
He agreed with the evidence given by the previous witnesses as to the practice
in clear weather in the ice region of the North Atlantic.
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Cross-examined by Mr Campbell – On a dark night with a smooth sea he had
himself detected and iceberg as far away as eight miles.
Captain WARR, examined by Mr Hill, said that he was a retired master mariner
with 49 years experience of the sea. He was in the Cunard service and had
commanded their ships for nineteen years. When he retired he was commodore
captain of the line. He had had 30 years experience of the North Atlantic.
The practice in the ice region in fair weather was to maintain course and speed
until ice was sighted. A normal berg can be seen on a clear dark night four or five
miles away. He did not agree with supplying look-out men with glasses.
Cross-examined – The nearest he had ever been to an iceberg before he saw it
was half a mile. That was in hazy weather and they were going half speed.
EVIDENCE OF A NAVAL ARCHITECT
Mr EDWARD WILDING, examined by Mr Hill, said that he was a naval architect
in the employment of Messrs Harland and Wolff, the builders of the Titanic. He
had worked out the turning circle of the Titanic under different speeds.
They had made experiments with the Olympic, the Titanic’s sister ship, and they
found that she travelled 440 yards forward and 100 yards laterally in turning two
points.
Mr HAROLD ARTHUR SAUNDERSON [sic] , examined by Mr Duke, said that he
was a Director and General Manager of the Oceanic Steam Navigation Company.
Their vessels ran in the service of the White Star Line.
They were the mail carriers between this country and New York, and were
bound to provide their fastest ships to the Government, but were under no
obligation to arrive within a particular time. The Titanic’s speed was 22 to 22½
knots. The officers of the Titanic had been carefully selected.
They had officers in excess of the numbers required by the Board of Trade.
During the ten years preceding the loss of the Titanic they had carried 2,000,000
passengers in their ships.
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Cross-examined by Mr Campbell – He was not in the ship at the time of the
disaster.
The evidence was concluded.
Mr Justice Bailhache said that before counsel addressed the jury and before he
summed up, it would be necessary for him to decide whether under the
agreement entered into between the Marconi company and the defendants, the
Marconi operators were the agents of the White Star Line.
The jury were accordingly released for a short time while arguments on this
point were addressed to His Lordship by Mr Duke and Mr Campbell respectively.
At the conclusion of the argument Mr Justice Bailhache said he did not think
the Marconi operators were the servants of the ship owners in such a sense as to
make a failure of duty on their part in transmitting messages to the bridge an act
done by them in pursuance of their service to the ship owners which would make
the ship owners liable for negligence.
Mr Duke then addressed the jury on behalf of the defendants, and had not
concluded when the further hearing was adjourned until tomorrow.
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DAY IV Wednesday, June 25, 1913.
The closing speech of Mr Duke was completed on behalf of the defendants.
Mr Campbell made his closing speech on behalf of the plaintiff, Thomas Ryan.
These speeches occupied much of the day. Mr Justice Bailhache then delivered
his summing up to the jury and charged them to try the issue. They were
supplied with a copy of the issue paper, on which were outlined a series of
questions which they must answer. The answers would determine if there had
been any negligence, and if so, in which specific areas it lay.
The special jury then retired to deliberate.
Mr Justice Bailhache had left the court for the day when they returned. He
hurried back to court.
The next day’s newspapers could manage only a brief summation. This from the
London Times:-
VERDICT
“In the action for damages for negligence brought against the Oceanic Steam
Navigation Company by a man whose son was lost in the Titanic disaster, the jury
returned a verdict to the effect that the navigation of the vessel had not been
negligent as regards keeping a good look-out, but that there had been negligence
as regards speed.
They found there was no evidence to show that the Mesaba message had
reached a responsible officer in the Titanic. The proceedings were adjourned.”
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DAY V Thursday, June 26, 1913.
In the first of these actions, which was brought by Thomas Ryan to recover
damages for the loss of his son who was lost in the Titanic owing to the alleged
negligence in the navigation of the vessel, the jury yesterday found in answer to
the questions as left to them by the judge that there had been no negligence in
the navigation of the ship insofar as the keeping of the look-out was concerned,
but that there had been negligence as regards the speed at which the vessel was
travelling at the time of the disaster.
They also found, in answer to a further question, that there was no sufficient
evidence to show whether a message giving warning as to ice, dispatched by the
Mesaba, had reached the hands of any responsible officer in the Titanic.
The further proceedings in the action were adjourned until today.
Mr Campbell, KC, Mr Scanlan, and Mr Jackson Wolfe appeared for the plaintiff;
and Mr Duke, KC, Mr Maurice Hill, KC, and Mr Raeburn for the defendants.
Mr Campbell said that the main question in all the actions as to negligence had
been disposed of. There remained two other questions – the measure of damages
in each case, and the legal question with regard to the conditions on the tickets
supplied by the defendants with the consequential questions of fact.
Mr Justice Bailhache said that he must take the opinion of the questions of fact
involved, because the question arising under the Merchant Shipping Act was one
of great importance.
Mr Duke said that all four passengers concerned in the actions were carried out
on the terms of the ticket, a copy of which had been put in. The question of fact
for the jury would be whether the defendants took proper steps to bring the
contents of the tickets to the knowledge of their passengers.
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THE PROVISIONS OF THE MERCHANT SHIPPING ACT
Mr Campbell, in opening the matter to the jury, said that the question of fact
which they had to decide arose in this way. There was a provision in the
Merchant Shipping Act which prescribed a certain form of ticket in the case of
passenger ships carrying passengers beyond the United Kingdom.
That form was prescribed both with regard to first and second class passengers,
and with regard to steerage passengers. With regard to the latter, several Acts of
Parliament had conferred on steerage passengers certain rights as regards food,
sleeping accommodation, &c., and that had been followed by the provision in
question, which enabled the Board of Trade from time to time to prescribe a form
of ticket to be issued to the steerage passengers.
There was a form prescribed which was the statutory form at the particular
period. A question of law arose upon the point, with which they would now be
concerned. That question was – supposing the form of that form of contract was
departed from, or anything was added to it in the shape of a condition not to be
found in the form, whether that condition was legal or not.
FORM OF THE TICKET
Setting that aside, he would address them on the assumption that the
defendants would be entitled to insert conditions other than those in the
prescribed form. Assuming that they could, the question for them was whether
the defendants, having inserted conditions other than those to be found on the
face of the prescribed form, took reasonable care to being a knowledge of those
conditions home to minds of the persons whose relatives were bringing the
present actions.
The face of the ticket supplied in the case under consideration reproduced the
prescribed form, and No. 7 of the conditions enumerated upon in said, “A
contract ticket shall not contain on the face thereof any condition, stipulation, or
exception not contained in this form.”
It was on those words that the question of law would arise. Those words would
put an intelligent person on his guard, because he would assume that he had the
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conditions of the contract on the face of the ticket and that he would not be
bound by anything not to be found there.
Although the front of the ticket was in the form prescribed by the Board of
Trade the back should a wholly different state of affairs, and there appeared the
condition on which the defendants relied as absolving them from the negligence
of their servants. That condition gave the defendants a clean bill of indemnity
against any damage resulting from any act due to the negligence of the
defendants’ servants.
It was admitted by the company that they took no precautions or steps of any
kind to make the passenger acquainted with the conditions on the ticket, except
by posting a little slip on the face of the ticket and adding the words “See Back”
on the bottom of it.
The words on the slip were:-
“Your attention is specially directed to the conditions of transportation in the
annexed contract. The company’s liability for baggage is strictly limited, but
passengers can protect themselves by insurance, which may be effected at this or
any of the company’s offices or agencies.”
Each of the four cases depended on particular facts with regard to the steps
taken to call the passenger’s attention to the conditions on the ticket, but he
submitted that if ever there was a case in which insufficient steps had been
taken, it was in the case of these steerage passengers.
Let them take the case of Ryan, whose father was the plaintiff in the first
action. He never saw the officials of the defendants’ company at all, and the
company was never brought into privity with him. A friend called [Daniel] Moran,
who was going with a sister [Bertha Moran] to America and knew that Ryan was
also going, volunteered to get a ticket for him with his own.
He accordingly wrote to the agents of the defendants in Cork. He then paid £3
deposit on the three tickets and received one ticket for the three of them, paying
the balance of the passage money the day before sailing.
The materiality of the fact of one ticket’s being supplied was that as a natural
consequence Moran would probably keep it. Ryan himself had no ticket, and it
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was ridiculous to say in Ryan’s case that the defendants took any precautions
whatever to bring the conditions on the ticket to his knowledge, and in all
probability Ryan never saw the ticket at all.
The onus was on the defendants to satisfy the jury that they took reasonable
precautions to bring the conditions on the ticket to the notice and knowledge of
their passengers, and he submitted that the slip on the face of the ticket and the
words “See Back” were not sufficient to do so in the case of people in the position
of Ryan.
THE ISSUE OF THE TICKETS
Evidence was then called with regards to the facts as to the issue of the ticket
in Ryan’s case.
MICHAEL RYAN, examined by Mr Campbell, said that the boy who was
drowned was a brother of his. He was with his brother until the morning he left.
Up to the time left, he did not see his brother with any ticket. His brother could
read and write.
Cross-examined by Mr Duke – He and his brother went to school together. His
brother went with the two Morans to Queenstown. He knew his brother had left it
to Moran to make the arrangements. His brother was 28 or 30. Moran had been
to America before. A good number of people from his neighbourhood went to
America every year. He knew they had tickets and had seen them.
Re-examined – He had never in his life read one of the tickets.
Mr Duke called Mr GEORGE HARRIS of the firm of Messrs Jas Scott & Co.,
Queenstown, with whose firm Moran had corresponded with regard to the tickets.
He said that he saw Moran, his sister, and Ryan in his office when they paid the
balance of the passage money.
The ticket was produced when they were there. The form of ticket had been in
use for as long as he could remember, and the slip had been attached for ten
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years. His firm were also agents for the American Line and for the Dominion Line.
The tickets for those lines were precisely the same in appearance as those issued
by the defendants and had conditions endorsed upon them.
Mr Duke then submitted that Ryan constituted Moran his agent to get his
ticket and was bound by his acts in relation to what was done. Ryan was going
from a district from which people went to America in large numbers. Some of
these people came back, and their tickets had become common knowledge in the
district. It followed that Ryan knew that the terms of the contract with the
company were contained in this ticket. He was not entitled to disregard the words
“See Back” on the face of the ticket.
The document front and back was the document, with which emigrants had
been familiar since emigration began. If a man took a document which he knew to
contain the terms of a contract he was in ordinary circumstance bound by those
terms, whether he read them or not.
He had to satisfy them that the defendants did what was sufficient to give
notice of the conditions to the class of persons to which the plaintiff belonged.
The class of people were the steerage passengers, who for 30 years had been
people who could read and write.
Therefore the defendants were entitled to address the terms of the contract to
their sight. Moran had the document in his possession six days and paid the
balance of the passage money after it had been in his possession for that time.
They had the ticket for six days in a quiet countryside where they were concerned
at the moment with the immediate business of their lives.
THE SUMMING UP
Mr Justice Bailhache, in summing up to the jury, said that the question they
had to decide was whether the deceased man Ryan knew of the conditions on the
back of the ticket, or whether the defendants had taken reasonably sufficient
means to give the deceased notice of them, having regard to the class of life to
which he belonged.
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It was clear that nothing was said to anyone about the conditions. Moran and
Ryan attended at the office of the defendants’ agents and the agents did not tell
them of the conditions or read them over. What Moran was sent was a ticket
folded up. When he unfolded it he could not help seeing that there was something
printed on the back, and if he read it at all, which was very doubtful, he would
see the words printed on the slip on the face of the ticket and also the words “See
Back.”
These being the facts, had the defendants taken reasonable means to bring the
conditions to the notice of the deceased? Speaking for himself, he would have
thought that the slip on the face of the contract would rather have a tendency to
put a man off reading the conditions on the back because it referred to the
defendants’ denial of liability in regard to baggage, and he might think that as it
specially referred to that, there were no conditions relating to anything else.
In the case before them there was the difficulty that the ticket was one for three
persons, and that it was delivered to Moran and it might well be that a ticket of
that kind delivered to Moran was not sufficient notice of its conditions to Ryan,
although they were going in the same steamer.
It was not necessary that they should find that Ryan actually read the ticket,
because if the company took reasonable steps to bring the conditions to his
attention, the fact that he did not read it was quite immaterial.
The question he desired them to answer was as follows:-
“Did the defendants do what was reasonably sufficient to give the deceased
man, Ryan, notice of the conditions on the ticket, having regard to the class of life
to which he belonged?”
Mr Duke asked that a similar question might be put in regard to Moran, in view
of his submission that Moran was acting as Ryan’s agent.
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THE JURY’S ANSWERS
His Lordship assented, and the jury, after a short deliberation answered both
questions in the negative.
Mr Justice Bailhache asked what was going to be done with regard to the
damages.
Mr Campbell said that he thought they would be able to agree upon a sum.
Continuing, he said that by agreement with Mr Duke the findings of the jury as to
the ticket would apply in the cases of [James] Scanlan and [Patrick D.]
O’Connell, in which the facts were substantially similar.
Mr Justice Bailhache recorded a verdict in favour of the plaintiff Ryan in the
first action on the findings of the jury as to negligence and lack of knowledge as
to the conditions upon the ticket.
THE REMAINING CASES
The jury was then sworn in the cases of O’Connell and Scanlan. Mr Duke said
that they would take it that the evidence given on the issues as to negligence had
been given in those cases as well, and also the evidence with regard to the ticket.
Mr Campbell said that all he desired to prove in these two cases were that the
men in regards to whose death the actions were brought were minors. Evidence
was accordingly given by relatives to this effect. The jury was then sworn in the
case of [Denis] O’Brien.
Mr Campbell said that this case was a little exceptional. O’Brien, who was
about 20 years of age, lived with his widowed mother. He had a brother living in
America who paid or made a deposit in that country in respect of a ticket for this
lad, who was to join him there.
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In such a case as that, the defendants issued a prepaid ticket in America. That
certificate was given to the person who paid the ticket money, and he forwarded it
to the person for whom the ticket was bought. That person took the prepaid
certificate to the office in Ireland, and in exchange they gave him an ordinary
ticket.
The front of the prepaid ticket was practically identical with the back of the
ordinary ticket, and contained the conditions to be found on the latter. In the
case before them the prepaid certificate was sent to the mother of the deceased.
She kept it for some time, and about a fortnight before the Titanic left she gave
it to her son, who went to the defendants’ agent at Skibberreen and in return for
it received the ordinary ticket.
In these circumstances, Mr Campbell submitted that the conditions on the
ticket had been brought sufficiently to the mind and knowledge of the passenger.
Evidence having been given of the facts above, Mr Duke, for the defendants,
called CHARLES HOSGOOD, who said that his mother was the agent for the
defendants at Skibberreen. He had had an interview with O’Brien when he
brought the prepaid certificate, and his practice was to tell intending passengers
to read over the ticket, and if there was anything they did not understand he read
it over to them.
His Lordship summed up the case to the jury, and in answer to a question in
similar terms to that left in the case of Ryan, they found that the defendants had
taken such steps as were reasonably necessary to bring the terms of the
conditions on the ticket to O’Brien’s notice.
Mr Duke said they had come to the arrangement that the jury should assess
the damages provisionally at £100 in each case.
This was accordingly done and the jury was discharged.
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The contending parties next argued points of law in regard to the validity or
otherwise of the conditions printed on the back of passenger tickets by the
defendants.
Mr Justice Baihache said that the point raised was one of very great importance
and he hoped to give judgement on Monday next.
There would be judgment for the plaintiffs in three of the cases with the general
costs of the action; but the defendants would have the costs on the question
relating to the boat drill, which Mr Campbell had abandoned as a substantive
point.
The costs would be taxed, and paid over on the usual solicitors’ undertakings;
to that extent there would be a stay of execution.
The fourth case would be dealt with on Monday.
DAY VI Monday, June 30, 1913.
JUDGMENT
This morning Mr Justice Bailhache delivered a written and considered judgment
in which he said:-
“A point of great general importance was taken by the plaintiff and arises in this
way. By Section 320 (2) of the Merchant Shipping Act, the contract referred to in
subsection 1 ‘shall be in a form approved by the Board of Trade and published in
the London Gazette.’
The ticket is, so far as the terms appear upon its face, approved; but the
conditions upon the back have not been approved by, nor submitted to, the
Board of Trade. The ticket on its face, that is, on its approved part, contains
seven numbered clauses, or directions, of which the seventh is:-
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‘ A contract ticket shall not contain on the face thereof any condition,
stipulation, or exception not contained in this form.’
The question for decision is – Is this ticket in a form approved by the Board of
Trade?
It is upon clause seven that Mr Duke mainly relies. He says that that is the
provision the Board of Trade has made for the ship owner, and made by a series
of steps, showing the course of legislation by the Department over a period of 30
years.
In this connection I was referred to Section 71 of the Passengers Act, 1855, (18
& 19 Vic., Cap. 119), and to the various forms of contract ticket published in the
London Gazette since that Act.
The Passengers Act, 1855, contains a form in its Schedule L. That form has
upon its face five numbered clauses
which in substance correspond with the
first five clauses on the present ticket,
but no clause similar to clause seven.
Long afterwards, in the year 1888, a
form of ticket was published in the
London Gazette of August 24, with a
clause to the effect that a contract ticket
should not contain, either on the face of
the back thereof, or have annexed
thereto, any condition, stipulation, or
exception not contained in this form.
Then in February 1889, a form was
published in the London Gazette which is
substantially the form now in use.
Mr Duke, for the defendants, naturally
called attention to the striking difference
between this form and that of August
1888. It was further urged for theThe Judgement
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defendants that if a ship owner may not print upon the back of the ticket such
conditions as he pleases, subject to the reservation that they do not vary or
conflict with the express terms upon the fact of the ticket, and, of course,
provided he can get steerage passengers to accept them, clause seven is
meaningless.
Mr Duke says clause seven is a direction, and referred to the Merchant
Shipping Act, which provides that directions on the ticket not inconsistent with
the Act are to be obeyed as if set forth in Section 320.
THE PASSENGER’S POSITION IN LAW
In considering the points raised and the answers I have to give to the questions
in debate, it seems desirable to point out the difference between the passenger’s
position in law under the contract without the conditions, and under the contract
with the conditions.
For this purpose I may confine myself to condition three. Under the contract
without the conditions, the passenger’s legal position is that he is entitled to
damages for loss or injury to or of himself, and ten cubic feet of luggage, limited
in the latter case to £10. He is also entitled to have himself and that quantity of
luggage carried in a seaworthy ship.
Under the contract with the conditions, he has no remedy for negligence, and
the ship owner’s duty to provide a seaworthy ship is very materially modified.
One or two other considerations must be borne in mind. The Board of Trade is
brought into the matter for the obvious purpose of safeguarding the passenger’s
interest - to exercise what Mr Duke calls a species of guardianship. This is the
more important as few steerage passengers read their ticket.
Fewer still can understand them, and their assent to the conditions upon them
is not the assent of a mind consciously exercised upon the question, but that
assent which the law implies from the acceptance of a ticket which contains
conditions of which they have had reasonable notice.
Moreover, the steerage passenger has little or no option in the matter. These
conditions are practically common to all the lines by which in ordinary course he
can travel. But after all, when these various matters have been discussed and
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investigated, I must come to the construction of the statute itself, and in so doing
I remind myself that if the words of the statute are plain and unambiguous, it is
to them and them alone I must look in deciding the question now before me.
THE MEANING OF A CONTRACT TICKET
I ask myself first of all: What is meant by a contract ticket? I take it to be quite
plain that that means the whole document, front and back. It is the document
which, when read in the light of the law applicable to the document, regulates the
rights and liabilities of ship owner and passenger upon the voyage to which the
ticket refers.
Next I ask, What is meant by the form of the contract ticket? And does the word
‘form’ mean the shape, size and appearance of the ticket only, or does it cover the
contents of the ticket, the matters for which it makes provision, and the manner
in which it deals with those matters?
I think it clearly means the latter. This is certainly the ordinary acceptation of
the term, and I see no reason, and indeed have I think no right, to reject it in this
case.
I ask myself one further question: What is meant by ‘approval’? Accepting for
the moment Mr Duke’s argument as to clause or direction seven, can the Board of
Trade be said to have approved of conditions which they, without seeing them,
have left it to the ship owner to introduce?
Can they give, under the statute, such liberty to the ship owner as a man may
be said to approve beforehand of the figures filled into a blank cheque, signed by
him and handed to a holder to deal with?
I think not.
I find myself, therefore, with the provisions of a statute which seems to me
unambiguous, and my only duty is to give effect to them. So doing , I can only
answer the question as to whether this ticket was in a form approved by the
Board of Trade in one way: It was not.
I may add, that as at present advised, I am not convinced that clause or
direction seven gives power to print on the back of the ticket unapproved
conditions. It certainly does not expressly say so.
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It is just possible, under that direction, there would be no objection to
conditions on the back even though unapproved, provided those conditions
related to matters other than the carriage of the passengers and ten cubic feet of
luggage, as, for example, conditions dealing with excess luggage, as condition six
in the present case does.
It is not quite easy to reconcile clauses one and seven, and I am not sure about
the effects of the words ‘See Back’ on the face of the ticket. I am not certain that
the legal effect of those words is not to make the conditions printed on the back
part on the face of the ticket, and to abolish any distinction between the face and
back.
I, however, do not decide the case on these grounds. I decide it upon the broad
ground that condition three never having been seen by the Board of Trade, this
ticket, as it stands, is not in a form approved by the Board of Trade within the
meaning of the statute.
There will therefore be judgment for the plaintiff also in this case.”
Mr Justice Bailhache added that in this case there would be a stay of execution
as to the damages; the costs would be taxed, and paid upon the usual
undertaking.
On the application of Mr Maurice Hill, His Lordship ordered that the plaintiff
should pay the costs of the issue that the defendants had prevented the plaintiff
from going to the boats or to the boat-deck, which had been plaintiff on the
pleadings and abandoned before trial.
The trial of the action concluded. Later Developments...
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The Oceanic Steam Navigation Company Ltd appealed these verdicts to the Court
of Appeal in November 1913 on points of law and were once more unsuccessful.
Their next appeal was to the House of Lords, where the grounds of appeal were
held to be without merit and the appeal dismissed in February 1914. The verdict
of negligence in the Titanic’s navigation through unjustified speed in a known
icefield was upheld for all time.
The case of Ryan informed the compensation claims brought in the United
States in the Southern District Court of New York. These claims were eventually
settled out of court in December 1915. Despite claims running into tens of
millions, only $663,000 (£136,701) was eventually shared among all claimants.
Henry Edward Duke, lead counsel for the Oceanic Steam Navigation Company
Ltd, became one of the last Chief Secretaries for Ireland, in 1916. He also became
Lord Justice of Appeal and died in 1939 at the age of 84.
Mr Justice Bailhache died of a seizure while on a beach holiday with his wife in
1924, at the age of 67. His death was curiously similar to that of Lord Mersey, who
died at a beach hotel in 1929.
Thomas Ryan’s compensation was equivalent to just a year’s income for his
son, who had been earning just two pounds a week. Like his son, he died in
obscurity. Today Ryan v. Oceanic S. N. Co. is still cited, since it established early
precedent in consumer and contract case law.
This transcription and all images courtesy of Senan Molony.